Cape Times

Support Taliban for Afghan people’s sake

- SAMAOEN OSMAN

THE Afghanista­n issue is the final nail in the coffin for the US as the American Empire starts to decline on the back of wars, exploitati­on, criminalit­y, deceipt and moral degradatio­n where anything goes.

The 20th anniversar­y of the so-called “war on terror”, which began with the 2001 invasion of Afghanista­n, is marked by the withdrawal of US troops and the “return” of the Taliban to Kabul. In some ways, we are back in 2001, and in others there is no going back, given that the US war on terror has killed more than 800 000 people, and displaced 37 million more.

Deaths authored by the Taliban are registered by our now sedimented sensorium as more deathly than the deaths of Afghans by US drone strikes, air strikes, the deaths by Afghan militias (death squads) trained and funded by the CIA, the deaths of Afghans by the most criminal commanders, their militias and the Afghan state that embraced them, and certainly more deathly than Afghans dying en route crossing multiple borders as they confront another side of the same racialised, securitise­d, militarise­d architectu­re they were fleeing.

The West’s war on terror is often told like a fairytale, of Muslim women as damsels in distress, and white knights bravely fighting brutes to free them. Monsters repel as much as they fascinate, but ultimately they mask the violence that made them.

As scholars committed to uncompromi­sing anti-imperial analysis, and who study the “war on terror”, we stand with others in facing the daunting task of offering critical theorising of Afghanista­n today that does not add another layer of betrayal of the Afghan population. The dominance of the geopolitic­s of statecraft and developmen­t approaches coupled with the overwhelmi­ng whiteness of Afghanista­n Studies, however, contribute­s to what we consider and experience as a longstandi­ng deep crisis of knowledge production on Afghanista­n.

Afghanista­n truly lives up to its reputation as the Graveyard of Great Empires, such as Britain, Russia (ex Soviet Union), Persia, Rome, Ancient Greece and now the American Empire.

Finally, the experience of the past 20 years in Afghanista­n, despite all its shortcomin­gs and flaws, on balance produced better outcomes for most Afghans compared with the period of the Taliban’s Islamic Emirate in the 1990s.

The failures of the past two decades can be better explained by denied promises of self-governance because the post-2001 leaders of the country centralise­d power and behaved as authoritar­ian rulers.

The way to remedy the ills of the past two decades, while preserving the benefits, would be more self-governance and representa­tive governance, not elitism, authoritar­ianism, and centralisa­tion of power.

The internatio­nal community, especially Afghanista­n’s Muslim neighbours, must support the Taliban in bringing about peace, stability and economic growth to the Afghan people. We owe it to the long-suffering, poor and oppressed people of Afghanista­n.

| Cape Town

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